6 secret storage units: where did Epstein actually hide the traces

Jeffrey Epstein rented at least six storage units across the United States to keep evidence that could be hidden from investigators — computers, photographs, and other materials.
According to documents obtained by the publication, he even hired private detectives to remove equipment and devices from his home in Florida. This suggests that, ahead of possible searches, Epstein may have tried to “leave no trace” by moving some items to off-site storage units.
Payments did not stop from 2003 to 2019
According to information cited by The Telegraph, Epstein rented at least one storage unit from 2003, and credit card receipts show that payments for the units were made regularly until 2019 — the year he died.
The most debated point is that U.S. authorities may not have inspected these off-site units. Because of this, speculation is growing that undisclosed materials that have not been made public could still be there.
The DoJ released a large package, but questions remain
Public attention to this topic has increased for a reason. The U.S. Department of Justice said that on January 30, 2026, it published a large volume of materials under the requirements of a document-transparency law adopted in late 2025 — with the total said to reach nearly 3.5 million pages.
Against this backdrop, the “storage units” issue raised by The Telegraph brings up another question: if earlier-year materials were indeed kept in off-site units, were they included in the overall released package or not? So far, there is no clear answer.
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